stop all instances of node.js server
Solution 1:
Windows Machine:
Need to kill a Node.js server, and you don't have any other Node processes running, you can tell your machine to kill all processes named node.exe
. That would look like this:
taskkill /im node.exe
And if the processes still persist, you can force the processes to terminate by adding the /f
flag:
taskkill /f /im node.exe
If you need more fine-grained control and need to only kill a server that is running on a specific port, you can use netstat
to find the process ID, then send a kill signal to it. So in your case, where the port is 8080
, you could run the following:
C:\>netstat -ano | find "LISTENING" | find "8080"
The fifth column of the output is the process ID:
TCP 0.0.0.0:8080 0.0.0.0:0 LISTENING 14828
TCP [::]:8080 [::]:0 LISTENING 14828
You could then kill the process with taskkill /pid 14828
. If the process refuses to exit, then just add the /f
(force) parameter to the command.
MacOS machine:
The process is almost identical. You could either kill all Node processes running on the machine:
killall node
Or also as alluded to in @jacob-groundwater's answer below using lsof
, you can find the PID of a process listening on a port (pass the -i
flag and the port to significantly speed this up):
$ lsof -Pi :8080
COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE/OFF NODE NAME
node 1073 urname 22u IPv6 bunchanumbershere 0t0 TCP *:8080 (LISTEN)
The process ID in this case is the number underneath the PID column, which you could then pass to the kill
command:
$ kill 1073
If the process refuses to exit, then just use the -9
flag, which is a SIGTERM
and cannot be ignored:
$ kill -9 1073
Linux machine:
Again, the process is almost identical. You could either kill all Node processes running on the machine (use -$SIGNAL
if SIGKILL
is insufficient):
killall node
Or also using netstat
, you can find the PID of a process listening on a port:
$ netstat -nlp | grep :8080
tcp 0 0 0.0.0.0:8080 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 1073/node
The process ID in this case is the number before the process name in the sixth column, which you could then pass to the kill
command:
$ kill 1073
If the process refuses to exit, then just use the -9
flag, which is a SIGTERM
and cannot be ignored:
$ kill -9 1073
Solution 2:
Works for Linux, OS X
killall node
Solution 3:
You can use lsof
get the process that has bound to the required port.
Unfortunately the flags seem to be different depending on system, but on Mac OS X you can run
lsof -Pi | grep LISTEN
For example, on my machine I get something like:
mongod 8662 jacob 6u IPv4 0x17ceae4e0970fbe9 0t0 TCP localhost:27017 (LISTEN)
mongod 8662 jacob 7u IPv4 0x17ceae4e0f9c24b1 0t0 TCP localhost:28017 (LISTEN)
memcached 8680 jacob 17u IPv4 0x17ceae4e0971f7d1 0t0 TCP *:11211 (LISTEN)
memcached 8680 jacob 18u IPv6 0x17ceae4e0bdf6479 0t0 TCP *:11211 (LISTEN)
mysqld 9394 jacob 10u IPv4 0x17ceae4e080c4001 0t0 TCP *:3306 (LISTEN)
redis-ser 75429 jacob 4u IPv4 0x17ceae4e1ba8ea59 0t0 TCP localhost:6379 (LISTEN)
The second number is the PID and the port they're listening to is on the right before "(LISTEN)". Find the rogue PID and kill -9 $PID
to terminate with extreme prejudice.